Hobgoblins
It was bad movie time
and for once I was actually looking forward to watching our movie. After
Pumaman (see here), the Hobgoblins episode of Mystery Science Theatre 3000 is
definitely one of my most watched, so it was an exciting prospect to watch the
movie without the riffing. Was it as fun to watch without Mike and the bots? Or
was I in for more pain and anguish than I expected?
The world’s oldest
security guard, Mr. McCreedy (Jeffery Culver), works in an old film studio, that for some
reason has a locked room which contains several hobgoblins. These hobgoblins
can make a person’s fantasies come true, and then kill them using these
fantasies, and after a trainee security guard is killed in the room whilst
having the fantasy of being the universes worst rock star, Dennis is forced to
find another recruit. He employs Kevin (Tom Bartlett) who seems to think that
guarding a film lot will impress his girlfriend Amy (Paige Sullivan). She
however seems embarrassed that he can’t beat her friend Daphne’s (Kelley
Palmer) army cadet boyfriend Nick (Billy Frank) in a rake fight! (Seriously. A
fight with rakes). Kevin doesn’t fare much better at work either, as on his
second day on the job he accidentally releases the hobgoblins into the world. By
some amazing co-incidence they go straight to Kevin’s house and start to make
his friends fantasies come true. Amy becomes a stripper, Nick a commando and
phone sex-line obsessed Kyle (Steven Boggs) gets a girlfriend. Will their
fantasies consume them? Will Kyle at least get laid before he dies? Will Mr
Mcready find out who the missed call was from at the beginning of the movie?
When you see that a
films director is also its writer, producer, editor and cinematographer you can
usually assume that unless that person is very talented then it’s usually a
really bad idea. The sort of bad idea that if a similar situation was to occur
with someone who had a much bigger budget, it could easily end up with the
creation of cinema’s most hated character and the tarnishing of one of
Hollywood’s most beloved trilogies. To be fair to Rick Sloane, he does seem to
have realised how much of a mess he made of Hobgoblins (unlike some other
directors) and actually submitted the movie to Mystery Science Theatre 3000
himself though.
Hobgoblins was
released in a time when using small puppets in horror movies was kind of popular.
Obviously Gremlins being the most well known and popular, but around the same
time there was also Critters, Ghoulies, Munchies, Puppet Master and Zelda
Rubinstein in Poltergeist. However the puppets in Hobgoblins are so badly done
they even make Zelda look like a real person.
At one point in the
movie, the Hobgoblins are perched (stuck down with gaffer tape at best) precariously
on a golf buggy, wobbling so much that they just look like oversized dashboard
ornaments that are in are a very real danger of falling over, and this is where
you really get to see how bad they are as puppets. Rather than the beautifully
crafted Gremlins or Crites, the hobgoblins are so bad they make Elmer from
Brain Damage look as though he was made in the Jim Henson Workshop. I’ve seen
more convincing puppets worn on the fingers of five year olds.
The humans in this
movie are if anything even less convincing than the hobgoblins. At this point
in the list, I expect the level of acting to be as bad as someone with a
hangover calling in sick to work, but the acting in this is sticks out as being
particularly bad. If you’ve watched Troll 2 (see here), with its strange idea
of using people auditioning to be extras as actors, then this reminded me of
that. The cast lack talent, but they do have the enthusiasm of those who can’t
quite understand how they got there, but will do their best no matter how
incompetent they are. They’re like the middle management of the acting world.
The least convincing
moment in all of this though, is the pointless, and unbelievably lame rake
fight scene between Kevin and Nick. It’s less of a fight, than a game of
Pattycake, played with a couple of rakes (with added synth effects added just
out of time to the actual clash of wood). It’s so overly long and pointless it
brings to mind the fight between Roddy Piper and Keith David in They Live, but
without either the fun or fight choreography that made that scene hugely enjoyable. In fact it’s so bad it actually makes the fight
scene between Captain Kirk and the alien Gorn in the Star Trek episode "Arena" look
exciting and well choreographed.
The story makes less
sense than the Americans quarantine policy in 28 Weeks Later (a feat that
seemed impossible). There are these supposedly extremely dangerous creatures in
a warehouse, that’s guarded by a security guard so old and inept he was
probably the person who didn’t put a grate over the thermal exhaust ports on
the original Death Star (which would also explain how he ended in his dead end
job). All he has to do is keep one door and one metal cage locked, and make
sure that nobody else working alongside him has access to the keys, and then
there would be no monster breakouts. Instead he seems to think that not letting
his young co-workers know that the vault exists, let alone that they shouldn’t ever
open the doors, is a good idea. Hasn’t this man ever heard of curiosity? Why
not just tell them that there are barrels of toxic waste behind the door and
that opening it could lead to them getting some form of erectile dysfunction?
I’m pretty sure that would be an excellent way of not having them open the
door.
Also the hobgoblins
seem to be focused on killing a few horny teenagers, that they miss the
opportunity to actually cause any real havoc. Why don’t they attempt to make
the fantasies of the bikers, punks and other patrons of Club Scum (where Amy
goes to strip) come true? Surely someone in that whole crowd wants to do
something more than get laid, or be a Poundstore Rambo? I’m not saying that
these are bad things to dream about, but the hobgoblins really seem to have
been set loose in America’s least ambitious city.
So as I said, before
watching this I very familiar with this movie, and even without the MST3K crew
it’s definitely in the so bad it’s good category. Like Troll 2 and Plan 9 From Outer Space (see here) this movie is much
maligned, but like them, its faults make it a hugely entertaining and charming
movie. Hobgoblins is definitely a movie that I would recommend to any bad movie
lover. So stop being a snobgoblin, open your mind and give it a watch!
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